My Life4.30pm, BBC1

This final episode of the current series of this CBBC staple follows Anton, 11, who lost his arm in a car accident, and Olivia, seven, who lost both her left arm and her legs below the knees due to meningitis ("a crocodile bit my legs off," she prefers to tell people). Both are being fitted with hi-tech limbs that put to shame the prosthetic replacements they've had to put up with thus far. Inspiring stories told with an unremitting perkiness which matches the good spirits of both kids, despite their misfortunes. David Stubbs

The Apprentice9pm, BBC1

After last week's overpriced tat-flogging task, the shy and retiring hopefuls continue to rely on their sharp business minds to win Suralan's heart, and his quarter of a million pounds. Wait, that's not right. The two teams foghorn and back-stab their way through this week's challenge, driven by egos and cliched catchphrases. Yes, the boys look like One Direction on their first day of a business studies degree and the girls are, as Sir Nick so eloquently put it, "a pack of baying hyenas". That's why The Apprentice remains as lovable as ever. Hannah Verdier

WikiLeaks: The Secret Life Of A Superpower9pm, BBC2

Second part of the BBC's breathless sift through the quarter of a million secret US diplomatic cables made available in 2010 by WikiLeaks. In tonight's instalment, Richard Bilton promises to reveal what the United States really thinks about other countries, ally and foe alike. Unfortunately, anyone who has read any amount of the cables will already be aware of how unshocking the leaks are. Russia is volatile. China is booming. Iran having a bomb would be bad. Who knew? Andrew Mueller

Venice 24/78.30pm, BBC4

In the waterlogged City of Art, ferrying heavy works around requires a bit of forward planning. As a Venetian transport head puts it, lose something and "you'd get such a hefty fine you'd remember it for the rest of your life". In another visually glorious outing, British sculptor Anish Kapoor attempts to stage his installation Ascension, a pillar of white smoke drawn 50m up into the dome of the 16th-century Basilica di San Giorgio – as he says, "one of the most beautiful churches in the world". Ali Catterall

I Never Said Yes9pm, BBC3

As part of BBC3's Criminal Britain season, presenter Pips Taylor – herself a narrow escapee of an attack – talks to young women who have been raped, and hears why so many cases go unreported and why so few result in a conviction. Crucially, Taylor believes the authorities should be sending out the message "don't rape" rather than the unhelpful insistence in recent campaigns, "don't get raped". She's got a point. These unflinching interviews highlight the repercussions of rape but also tell positive stories about survival. Julia Raeside

The Man Who Discovered Egypt9pm, BBC4

The title here is a little presumptuous; obviously Egypt had been around for many thousands of years before the subject of this documentary, Flinders Petrie, turned up in the 19th century to survey the ruins of an ancient civilisation. A hugely influential Egyptologist who worked to preserve Egyptian treasures from tomb raiders, Petrie measured the pyramids and discovered the world's earliest portraits. Presenter Chris Naunton wants us to appreciate the man's achievements, but the cliched script ("He bestrode the world like a colossus") and humdrum narrative make it hard for the non-enthusiast to engage. Martin Skegg